Monday, June 15, 2026

The Sun Nigeria

Uzodimma: The story continues

22

By Ethelbert Okere

On January 15, 2020, Senator Hope Uzodimma was sworn in as the 7th democratically elected governor of Imo state.  Shortly after the oath-taking, Uzodimma proceeded to give his inaugural speech, which can be encapsulated in the following extraction: “I shall execute with utmost diligence and fidelity the five cardinal programmes of my administration anchored on Reconstruction, Rehabilitation and Recovery to ensure prosperity for all”.

Governor Uzodimma was to further adumbrate on his “prosperity for all mantra” when, in his maiden broadcast to the people on January 18, 2020, he said: “Our new Imo state will enshrine a new shared prosperity in which the common wealth of the people is made available for the good of all”.

Now, four years after and on the eve of taking up the renewed mandate handed over to him by the people on November 11, 2023, some skeptics are wont to ask: Did Governor Uzodimma share prosperity among his people in Imo state? While the answer to the above question cannot be a straight “Yes” or “No”, it even ought not arise in the first instance since nobody, no matter how powerful, can decree or distribute “prosperity”. The answer to the question, therefore, is that Governor Uzodimma might not have turned every household in Imo state into an Eldorado but there can be no doubt that in the four years during which he exercised his first mandate, he set the stage for a take off into sustainable prosperity of the Imo collective.

Uzodimma’s “Shared Prosperity” agenda is essentially aimed at lifting a substantial proportion of the Imo population out of poverty through the following: reduction of hunger, provision of good health facilities, provision of qualitative education, provision of portable water and clean environment, revival of infrastructure, gender equality, higher productivity, skills acquisition, increase in agricultural production etc. So much has been written on the giant strides made by the administration in the aforementioned sectors in its first four years but what is more germane at this point in time is the fact that the governor is already targeting at a stronger and wider macro socio-economic framework within which to further pursue his Shared Prosperity vision; and the signs for this become quite glaring even with a cursory look at his 2024 budget proposal and which he aptly christened, “Budget of Renewed Growth”.

Of the total of 582.2 billion naira budget, 491.2 billion naira, representing 82.9 percent of the total budget, will be on capital expenditure. Apart from that the 82.9 per cent represents the highest allocation to capital expenditure in the budget history of the state, it translates to a 32 per cent increase in capital expenditure compared with the previous year. Of course, it needs no exaggeration to state that such a gigantic allocation to capital expenditure is a clear indication that the governor is poised for a steadfast and unrelenting pursuit of his determination to stimulate and fast-track economic growth in the state. This very ambitious capital outlay for fiscal 2024, is, according to the governor, part of a 10-year development plan which focuses on the proposed Orashi Free Trade Zone  together with Orashi River dredging project, youth empowerment, agriculture etc, as a paradigm shift for massive economic growth within the period under focus.

The proposed sea access route from Oguta Lake through the Orashi river to the Atlantic has been described by those who are in position to know a “game changer” for Imo state in particular, and Nigeria, even the entire West African region, as a whole. The project, which was initiated, approved and set in motion under the administration of President Muhammadu Buhari is a collaboration between the Imo state government, the Nigerian Navy and a Consortium of technical partners. Speaking on the importance of the project at the flag-off of the pre-dredging hydraulic survey in May 2023, immediate past Vice President of the federal republic of Nigeria, Professor Yemi Osinbajo, said: “there are projects and there are projects but this project is unique. This is an economic transformation project; it is a game changer for Imo state, Nigeria and the West Coast of Africa. It is one of those one-of-a-kind projects whose benefits have always been glaring but vision, courage and tenacity were required to bring it to fruition. The project will fulfill its promise of radical transformation not only for the economy of the Southeast but for our nation as a whole”

A few days before the flag-off, President Buhari had granted the request by Governor Uzodimma to declare Oguta/Ohaji/Egbema and its environ as an Oil and Gas Free Trade Zone. The proposed Free Trade Zone has one of the largest hydrocarbon deposits in the country. According to experts, the synergy between the proposed sea route and the Free Trade Zone will deliver enormous commercial benefits for the entire Southeast zone and Imo state in particular.

Outside the Oguta-Orashi river dredging project, Governor Uzodimma has also mapped out other avenues through which he will, in the next four years, pursue his aggressive job creation programme. Already, his Skill-Up Imo programme has also been described as second to none. The programme is designed to provide free training and support to 300,000 youths – within a period of three years –  in new, innovative and economically viable skills needed for them to be productively employed or to be self employed. This programme was preceded by the creation of a Ministry of Digital Economy and E-governance  by the Uzodimma administration, making Imo the only state to do so in the entire federation. The creation of the ministry was in line with the governor’s vision to introduce a digital economic blueprint fashioned out to enhance the state’s economic development in accordance with global best practice.

The first batch of 15 thousand trainees graduated in September 2023 at a ceremony at the Dan Anyiam Stadium, Owerri. At that occasion Governor Uzodimma pronounced that his administration will continue to provide empowerment opportunities for the youths of the state, citing the importance of technology in wealth creation: “… Imo state is set to become the digital hub of Nigeria and Africa”, he told the audience.

Special guest of honour at the ceremony, Chief Leo Stan Ekeh, and chairman of the partnering company, Zinox Technologies, in a remark eulogized Governor Uzodimma for the enduring legacy he has brought to bear with the digital empowerment programme. “It is unprecedented. You can quote me. I do not know what inspired the governor. He has put a futuristic  system in place … I am excited with what the governor is doing. This is not the first time. The first time was, 5000 youths. Today, 15,000 youths. I am a witness and we are all witnesses to this ambition to create digital natives… what His Excellency has done today, it will even be difficult for the federal government to achieve in such a short period of time”. Turning to the graduands, Ekeh, a Forbes Best of Africa Leading Tech Icon, said: “if I am one of you today, I will take that tool, go home, invite my parents, brothers and sisters and hold hands and pray for the governor, his family and his government”.

Several participants in the Skill-Up programme, have caught the attention of global tech organizations who are encouraged by the contents and processes of the programme. Already, representatives of some of these tech giants in Europe, Canada and Singapore have visited the 3R Digital Learning Centre in Owerri, which has been described as a “Centre of Excellency”. Subsequently, some of the companies have expressed interest in partnering with the Imo state government in a programme that will see some of its graduates participating in an exchange scheme in order to further sharpen their skill for competition at the global level.

In the next four years, Governor Uzodimma will have his hands full with how to ensure that he meets the expectations of people of Imo state, especially the youths, who are very much excited and enthusiastic about the prospects of the Skill-Up programme. In simple terms, this particular project is one of his covenants with Ndi Imo as he goes into his second term in office.

The next is education. In the next four years, the governor will have a lot to do in order to ensure that the giant strides his administration posted in the education sector during his first term are not only sustained but improved upon. For the first time in its history, Imo state now has three state-owned universities – the Imo State University, which had been in existence before Uzodimma came to office, the University of Agriculture and Environmental Sciences, which he established upon assumption of office, the Kingsley Ozumba Mbadiwe University which he retrieved from one of his predecessors. These are in addition to a Polytechnic, the Imo State Polytechnic, Omuma, and a College of Education, the Ben Uwajimogu College of Education, Ihitte Uboma.

Then, of course, there is the upgrading of the Federal Medical Centre, Owerri to the Federal University Teaching Hospital, Owerri and the Alvan Ikoku College of Education, Owerri into a federal government-owned institution  – the Alvan Ikoku Federal University of Education. The coming of FUTHO brings the tally to two teaching hospitals in the state, a rarity in the entire country but perhaps with Imo being the only one in the Southeast with such facilities. The upgrading of Alvan Ikoku also brings the number of federal tertiary institutions in the state to three; another rarity in the country and, indeed, another never-heard-of in the Southeast.

Needless to say, Governor Uzodimma will have so much to talk about under education in his next four years. Of course, education is the first – if not the only – industry in the state, towards which there exists so much passion among the people. Differently put, the even bigger passion with which the governor went about his vision in the sector did not go unnoticed or unappreciated by the people. As a matter of fact, it was Uzodimma’s uncommon achievements in education that largely informed the massive support he got from students in the state. In the countdown to the November 2023 governorship election, students of Imo state origin in tertiary institutions across the country, and operating under the aegis of their umbrella body, the National Association of Imo State Students, addressed a press conference in Owerri during which they pledged their support for the governor’s re-election “for doing exceedingly well not only in the education sector but in other sectors”.

It is not complete to make this interrogation without referencing the security challenges that bedeviled the country as a whole and of which Imo state have had its fair share. It is another area Governor Uzodimma will occupy his time within the next four years in order to bring complete peace and quiet in the state. Here, two things go in favour of the governor and the people. One, the major factors that led to the contrived insecurity in the state and which got to a crescendo between 2020 and 2022, are hardly any longer in existence.

Those who orchestrated it, those who clapped for the unknown gun men as the latter unleashed mayhem on the hapless people, have either been routed or have surrendered, after discovering that such antic could not lead them to the (political) objectives they sought after. Two, they discovered that they could not succeeded in persuading the people to be part of their shenanigan. For, rather than buy the idea that the state should be made “ungovernable” for Uzodimma, as some of the key opposition elements had mouthed, the people rallied round their governor and gave him the support he needed. During the last electioneering campaigns, some elective office seekers sought to make insecurity an election issue but they were quickly rebuffed by the people who were convinced that their governor was on top of the situation.

In the next four years, it is expected that this type of synergy between the governor and the people will be consolidated and the state returned to its previous envious status as the most peaceful at least in the Southeast. Yes, hoodlums strike occasionally but residents of the state have been saved from the vulnerability they were exposed to when they orchestrated and contrived spate of insecurity was at its peak.  The just concluded festive period perhaps bore the most eloquent testimony. For, in spite of the debilitating hardship in country, indigenes of the state residing outside, both within the country and abroad, returned in numbers to celebrate with their loved ones, with little or no incidents recorded.

The rapid improvement in physical infrastructure witnessed in the last four years is certainly one other area the good people of Imo state will be pointing at as they celebrate the inauguration of their governor next Monday. It is an area Governor Uzodimma pulled his biggest surprise; as incredibly difficult terrains were almost effortlessly turned into seamless drives-through. Numerous lengthy articles have been written by both the governor’s handlers and independent observers on this but what has not been properly situated is that Imo is gradually being turned into a single urban economy; going by the ease with which the state capital, Owerri, can be accessed from the other two major urban centers, Okigwe and Orlu.

Before Uzodimma, it took more than an hour drive to cover a mere 37-kilometer distance between Orlu and Owerri.  Today, it can be done in twenty minutes, thanks to the spectacular rehabilitation and dualization of the road which had been a death trap for years. Ditto for Okigwe which commuters from both points can now do in thirty minutes as against three hours before now. Already, several indigenes of both areas – Okigwe and Orlu – in the state’s civil service have relocated back to their homes from where they commute daily to Owerri to report for duties, thus saving them the burden of paying for rents in Owerri.

With the governor’s determination to step up efforts at transforming both Orlu and Okigwe townships into modern cities, Imo state will soon become a one-stop economy where people can live, work and do business from any part. Needless to say, this and more are what the people will be celebrating as their performing governor once again formally accepts their mandate to preside over their affairs for another four years.

For the renewal of that mandate, Uzodimma got massive support from all segments of the Imo society. The spate of endorsements was unprecedented so much so that some skeptics said it was orchestrated. But on the D-day the people made good their words and for the first time in Nigeria, His Excellency, Senator Hope Odidika Uzodimma, won, with an overwhelming majority, in all the twenty seven local government areas of the state. Then ensued the celebration galore as the people in unison openly said: “Yes, We Did It.” As the peoples’ governor takes oath of office to continue his good work on Monday, January 15, 2024, it definitely will be another opportunity for Imolites to say: “Let The Music Play On!”

• Okere writes from Owerri, Imo State